| Literature DB >> 24955637 |
Samantha L Wilson1, Alicia J El Haj2, Ying Yang3.
Abstract
Corneal structure is highly organized and unified in architecture with structural and functional integration which mediates transparency and vision. Disease and injury are the second most common cause of blindness affecting over 10 million people worldwide. Ninety percent of blindness is permanent due to scarring and vascularization. Scarring caused via fibrotic cellular responses, heals the tissue, but fails to restore transparency. Controlling keratocyte activation and differentiation are key for the inhibition and prevention of fibrosis. Ophthalmic surgery techniques are continually developing to preserve and restore vision but corneal regression and scarring are often detrimental side effects and long term continuous follow up studies are lacking or discouraging. Appropriate corneal models may lead to a reduced need for corneal transplantation as presently there are insufficient numbers or suitable tissue to meet demand. Synthetic optical materials are under development for keratoprothesis although clinical use is limited due to implantation complications and high rejection rates. Tissue engineered corneas offer an alternative which more closely mimic the morphological, physiological and biomechanical properties of native corneas. However, replication of the native collagen fiber organization and retaining the phenotype of stromal cells which prevent scar-like tissue formation remains a challenge. Careful manipulation of culture environments are under investigation to determine a suitable environment that simulates native ECM organization and stimulates keratocyte migration and generation.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 24955637 PMCID: PMC4031002 DOI: 10.3390/jfb3030642
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Biomater ISSN: 2079-4983
Figure 1Basic anatomy of the human eye and location of the cornea.
Figure 2(a) DAPI stained cross section of the cornea detailing the 3 distinct cellular layers of the cornea, E, Alicia J. El Haj pithelium, Stroma and Endothelium; (b) schematic representation of the corneal layers with additional Bowman’s layer and Descemet’s membrane detailed.
Figure 3A schematic representation of (a) a cross sectional view; (b) a top view of the microstructural arrangement of the collagen fibrils: the collagen fibrils within the stromal layer are arranged parallel to each other in regularly spaced lamellae sheets.
Corneal diseases linked to scar tissue formation; their epidemiology, causes and treatment.
| Disease | Epidemiology | Causes | Treatment | Further information |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Deterioration of endothelial cells. | |||
| Loss in efficiency of pumping water from stroma. | ||||
| Swelling and distortion of cornea. | Thought to be inherited, autosomal dominant trait [ | Salt solutions such as sodium chloride drops or ointment are often prescribed to draw fluid from the cornea and reduce swelling. | Short-term success with transplantation, but long-term survival is a problem. | |
| Changes in the cornea’s curvature. | Gene mutation strongly suspected. | Contact lenses. | Cannot be cured. | |
| Hazing. | Hair dryer to dry out corneal blisters. | |||
| Tiny blisters on corneal surface. | ||||
| Glare and light sensitivity. | ||||
| Usually affects both eyes. | ||||
|
| Unilateral vision loss. | |||
| Ulceration. | Mechanical trauma, debris entering the eye, chemical and thermal burns. | |||
| Corneal perforation Endophthalmitis. | Workplace activities, such as mining injuries, agriculture and warfare. | Corneal transplant. | Ocular traumas are becoming more prevalent causes of scarring and blindness. | |
| Phthisis. | Road accidents [ | Antibiotic and antifungal treatments although visual outcome usually poor [ | Worldwide, half a million people are blind as the result of trauma [ | |
| Blindness. | Domestic accidents [ | |||
| Hyphaemas [ | ||||
| Ruptured globes. | ||||
|
| Bilateral scarring. | Infection caused by | Saline washes. | Blindness risk is reduced when opthalmia neonatorum is caused by less virulent pathogens such as Chlamydia trachomatis [ |
| Blindness. | Herpes simplex virus (HSV) can also cause childhood corneal blindness by causing opthalmia and xerophthalmia, although such infections are infrequent in infants. | Antibacterial eye ointments. | ||
| Affects both eyes. | Treatments with tetracyanite/erythromycin/silver nitrate ointments. | |||
|
| Subepithelial bullae. | Withdrawal of all potential causative drugs [ | ||
| Scarring. | Drugs including sulphonamides, anticonvulsants, salicytes, NSAIDs, penicillin [ | Intravenous fluid replacement. | <100 drugs associated with SJS [ | |
| Keratinocyte apoptosis of the surrounding skin and epidermal necrolysis. | Infection, such as HSV. | Immunosupressive therapy. | Most severe cases referred to as toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) | |
| Erosion of mucous membranes [ | Streptociocci, adenovirus and microplasma [ | Corneal stem cell transplant. | Transplanted tissue often rejected. | |
| Scarring. | Corneal transplant. | |||
| Bilateral blindness [ | ||||
|
| Night blindness. | 70% of cases are due to a vitamin A deficiency [ | Artificial tears. | |
| Xerosis. | Increase humidity of surroundings. | Xerophthalmia patients are predominantly infants or young children, with a peak age of approximately 2.5 years [ | ||
| Corneal perforation. Scarring. | Vitamin A supplementation. | All but disappeared in Western Europe [ | ||
| Irreversible blindness [ | ||||
|
| Vascularization. | Bacterial infection trachoma caused by | Corneal transplant. | World’s leading cause of ocular morbidity and blindness [ |
| Ocular surface problems Entropion. | Infection can be transmitted from eye to eye via contaminated fingers, clothes, make-up and flies. | The disease is preventable via antibiotic treatment with azithromycin [ | ||
| Trichiasis. | ||||
|
| Destructive chorioretinitis. Blinding keatitis | Caused by a parasite | Invermectin kills the microfilaria (larval form) and sterilizes the adult worm to prevent spread in infected individuals. | Incidences of onchoceriasis have decreased since the introduction of invermectin in the 1980s. |
| Acute corneal scarring. | Collagenase secretion, caused by the influx of inflammatory cells is believed to be responsible for the rapid destruction of the xerophthalmic cornea [ | |||
| Vascularization. | ||||
|
| Blindness. | Multi drug therapy using dapsone, rifampicin and clofazamine. | Corneal complications caused by leprosy are a significant cause of corneal blindness globally affecting 250,000 people, predominantly in Africa and Southern India. | |
| Chronic uveitis. | ||||
| Cataract formation. Exposure keratitis. Reoccurring corneal ulcers. Corneal scarring. | ||||
| Vascularization. |
Figure 4F-actin stained fluorescent images showing differences in morphology of (a) a fusiform fibroblast compared to (b) a more dendritic shaped keratocyte.
Figure 5A schematic diagram of an atypical keratoprosthesis